Find your username in the far left column. Going across, you must write a 1000-word vignette (usually 1-2 scenes) that incorporates your two assigned People, Places, and Things in some non-trivial way. They may be central to the story or peripheral details in the background. You can bring in as many other People, Places, and Things as you want, provided you use the six you were assigned.
If you were assigned a wiki entry you created or you get the same entrytwice, you can swap it out with the entry immediately above or below it in that same column.
For guidelines on writing and critiquing vignettes, look on the Critique page for the kinds of things that you should try to incorporate into your 1000-word vignette. You can also look on the Worldbuilding Examples page to get a look at how other students have tackled writing vignettes.
The most important piece of advice is to consider the perspective of your protagonist/main character and that you see and describe the world in terms that would make sense to that person in this world.
If you were assigned a wiki entry you created or you get the same entry twice, you can swap it out with the entry immediately above or below it in that same column.
For guidelines on writing and critiquing vignettes, look on the Critique page for the kinds of things that you should try to incorporate into your 1000-word vignette. You can also look on the Worldbuilding Examples page to get a look at how other students have tackled writing vignettes.
The most important piece of advice is to consider the perspective of your protagonist/main character and that you see and describe the world in terms that would make sense to that person in this world.
VIGNETTE #1 - Due Monday at 1:30 tagged "Gator1"
VIGNETTE #2 - Due Wednesday at 1:30 tagged "Gator2"